| Literature DB >> 24699931 |
Antoniya Todorova1, Peter Jenner2, K Ray Chaudhuri1.
Abstract
Non-motor symptoms are a key component of Parkinson's disease, possibly representing a clinical biomarker of its premotor phase. The burden of non-motor symptoms can define a patient's health-related quality of life. Non-motor symptoms substantially increase the cost of care-requiring increased hospitalisation and treatment-and pose a major challenge to healthcare professionals. However, clinicians often regard non-motor symptoms and their management as peripheral to that of the motor symptoms. Here, we address the clinical issues and unmet needs of non-motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: NMSQuest; NON MOTOR SYMPTOMS; PARKINSON'S DISEASE
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24699931 PMCID: PMC4174166 DOI: 10.1136/practneurol-2013-000741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pract Neurol ISSN: 1474-7758
Non-dopaminergic involvement in PD
| Evidence of non-dopaminergic involvement in PD | Implications on stage of PD | Author/year |
|---|---|---|
| Lewy bodies first described in non-dopaminergic neurones | Premotor and early motor | Forno, 1996 |
| Neuronal loss in dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus is as marked as in the substantia nigra | Premotor and early motor | Jellinger, 1987 |
| Cholinergic pediculopontine nucleus neurones and substance P-containing neurones suffer 77% loss in dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus while tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive neurones appear spared (<5% loss) | Premotor and early motor | Jellinger, 1987 |
| Complete sparing of medullary dopaminergic neurones reported | Premotor and early motor | Saper, 1991 |
| Lewy body degeneration is prominent in the non-dopaminergic anterior olfactory nucleus | Premotor and early motor | Wakabayashi, 1997 |
| Non catecholaminergic neurones severely depleted in PD in the autonomic system: spinal intermediolateral nucleus 30–40% loss of preganglionic autonomic neurones | Premotor and early motor | Wakabayashi, 1997 |
| Lewy bodies are frequent in the vasoactive intestinal peptide neurones of the enteric nervous system but rare in catecholaminergic cells | Premotor and early motor | Wakabayashi, 1997 |
| Lewy bodies present in both tyrosine hydroxylase+and tyrosine hydroxylase—cells in the cardiac plexus | Premotor and early motor | Wakabayashi, 1997 |
| Lewy body degeneration developing in lower brainstem neurones well before the substantia nigra | Premotor and early motor | Braak, 2003 |
| Incidental Lewy bodies identified within pontomedullary neurones in the absence of substantia nigra pathology, but not vice versa | Premotor and early motor | Braak, 2004 |
PD, Parkinson's disease.
Non-motor symptoms in the premotor PD
| Hyposmia (usually of late onset and idiopathic) | 10 times increase in risk of developing PD;+abnormal DATScan—43% develop motor PD in 4 years |
| Rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder | 25–40% risk of developing a synucleinopathy at 5 years; |
| Constipation | 2.7–4.5 times increased risk of PD |
| Depression | 2.4 times increased risk of developing PD |
| Excessive daytime sleepiness | 3.3 times increased risk of PD |
| Fatigue (a sense of exhaustion as opposed to sleepiness) | In 45%—a premotor symptom |
| Pain (often unilateral and in affected limb) | 34% increased risk of PD |
| Erectile dysfunction | 3.8 times increased risk of PD |
PD, Parkinson's disease.
Prevalence of non-motor symptoms from published studies using NMSQuest1 6–8 41–44
| Non-motor symptoms | Mean (%) | Range (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Cognitive | ||
| Memory | 45.8 | 37.9–62.5 |
| Concentration | 38.7 | 29.6–50.0 |
| Depression | ||
| Sadness | 42.5 | 22.5–56.0 |
| Anxiety | 43.4 | 30.7–55.8 |
| Sleep | ||
| Excessive daytime somnolence | 30.5 | 21.2–37.1 |
| Insomnia | 40.9 | 17.6–52.5 |
| REM sleep behaviour disorder | 34.2 | 29.6–38.7 |
| Restless legs syndrome | 35.8 | 27.7–41.1 |
| Fatigue | 41.5 | 31.1–58.1 |
| Pain | 31.1 | 18.2–45.9 |
| Gastrointestinal | ||
| Swallowing | 25.4 | 16.1–30.3 |
| Constipation | 46.5 | 27.5–71.7 |
| Urinary | ||
| Urgency | 53.4 | 35–61 |
| Nocturia | 53.8 | 26.4–66.7 |
| Global comparison | ||
| NMSQ-PD | 8.3 | 4–19 |
| NMSQ-C | 3.5 | 2–12 |
Data taken from studies by Chaudhuri et al;1 Chaudhuri et al;6 Mollenhauer et al;7 Khoo et al;8 Martinez-Martin et al;41 Barone et al;42 Crosiers et al;43 Chen et al;44 and expresses mean values of non-motor symptoms.
PD, Parkinson's disease; NMSQ-PD, Non-Motor Symptoms Questionnaire in PD patients; NMSQ-C, NMSQ—in controls.
Some reported possible biomarkers in the early diagnosis of PD
| Biochemical/histopathology markers | |
| Rectal/colonic biopsy | Phosphorylated α-synuclein-positive Lewy neurites; α-synuclein-positive nerve fibres ( |
| Skin biopsy | α-Synuclein accumulation |
| Gastric biopsy | Phosphorylated α-synuclein-positive Lewy neurites |
| Low uric acid | Proposed |
| Low-density lipoprotein/serum cholesterol | Proposed |
| Genetic markers | |
| Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 mutation (G2019S) | |
| Glucocerebrosidase mutation | |
| Imaging markers | |
| Transcranial sonography | |
| DAT scan | |
| Clinical markers combined with imaging | |
| NMSQuest, SCOPA AUT, smell-identification test ( | |
PD, Parkinson's disease; NMSQ, Non-Motor Symptoms Questionnaire; SCOPA AUT, SCOPA autonomic scale.
Figure 1(A) Showing 10 untreated Parkinson patients; all positive for α-synuclein and 3-nitro-tyrosin (a marker for mitochondrial stress) on sigmoidoscopy and rectal biopsy (A,B). From Shannon et al.45 Copyright 2011 Movement Disorder Society. Reproduced with permission from John Wiley and Sons, Inc. (B) Controls show no relevant staining (E,F). From Shannon et al.45 Copyright 2011 Movement Disorder Society. Reproduced with permission from John Wiley and Sons, Inc.
Figure 2University of Pennsylvania smell-identification test for testing olfaction in the clinic.
Figure 3Suggested algorithm of addressing non-motor symptoms in clinic (modified from Chaudhuri et al).48 HCP, healthcare professional; QoL, quality of life; PDSS, Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; Scopa AUT, Scales for Outcomes in Parkinson’s disease—Autonomic; ICD, impulse control disorders.
Figure 4(A) Non-motor symptoms (NMS) Quest, drug-naïve patient, H&Y 1, 5/30.
Figure 4(B) NMS Quest, drug-naïve patient, H&Y 1, 19/30.
Treatment suggestions for some non-motor symptoms
| Non-motor symptoms | Commonly used strategies (where possible based on randomised controlled studies) | Investigational or reported treatment options (based on open label or observational reports) |
|---|---|---|
| Sleep disorders | ||
| Excessive daytime sleepiness | Sleep hygiene (regular daytime exercise, avoiding stimulants at bedtime, regular hours of sleep at night) | Caffeine intake (contradictory data and tablets may be used) |
| Insomnia | Sleep hygiene | Night-time apomorphine infusion or Rotigotine patch (may help in cases of insomnia due to severe nighttime rigidity, restless legs syndrome and ‘off’ periods) |
| REM sleep behaviour disorder | Sleep in a safe environment while in bed, (remove all sharp and breakable objects) | Long-acting melatonin (use being investigated) |
| Mood disorders | ||
| Depression | ▸ Pramipexole—recommended by Movement Disorders Society | If as part of non-motor fluctuations |
| Fatigue | Methylphenidate—recommended by American Academy of Neurology, although considerable side effect profile | Modafinil (weak evidence base) |
| Pain | No specific recommendations apart from analgesics and dopaminergic drugs for non motor fluctuation related pain such as off related dystonic pain | Central pain: |
| Cognitive dysfunction | ||
| Dementia | ▸ Rivastigmine—recommended by the Movement Disorders Society (oral or transdermal patch) | Memantine |
| Psychosis (hallucinations/delusions) | ▸ Quetiapine (often used first line, based on clinical experience, despite of unconvincing trial data) | Pimavanserin (serotonin 2A receptor inverse agonist)—in clinical trial |
| Autonomic dysfunction | ||
| Dribbling of saliva | ▸ Oral atropine drops—2–3 times/day | ▸ Glycopyrrolate for short-term treatment—recommended by the Movement Disorders Society |
| Constipation | ▸ Diet and lifestyle advise: | |
| Bladder dysfunction—urgency, nocturia | ▸ Anticholinergic agents (use with caution in patients with hallucinations and cognitive decline) | ▸ If during off state—adjust PD medications |
| Erectile dysfunction | Phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors (use with caution in patients with postural hypotension) | Apomorphine injection may be tried |
| Orthostatic hypotension | Non-pharmacological therapies | Pharmacological therapies |
PD, Parkinson's disease.
Figure 5The spectrum of the multimorbid Parkinson's disease. GIT, gastrointestinal; NMF, non-motor fluctuation; DM, diabetes mellitus; SIBO, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth; ICD, impulse control disorders; DAWS, dopamine agonist withdrawal syndrome.